Apple’s 2024 is off to a rough start

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We’re less than a month into the new year, but it feels like it’s been a heck of a lot longer for Apple (AAPL) watchers. The tech giant has been making headlines left and right as it juggles a handful of downgrades to its stock price, faces required major changes to its App Store policies, and gears up for a potential antitrust lawsuit that could target large swaths of its business.

All of this comes as Apple prepares to launch its $3,499 Vision Pro headset. Apple’s most ambitious product in years, the Vision Pro catapults the company into a product category that even established players like Meta (META) have struggled to turn into a hit.

It’s a lot to say the least.

But it’s not all doom and gloom for Apple. Generative AI-equipped iPhones and a reacceleration of the company’s services business should help goose growth in the years ahead. And if the Vision Pro takes off, it would provide an entirely new revenue stream across both Apple’s hardware and services segments.

“I don't think Apple's in any way under any existential threat right now that didn't exist before,” Deepwater Asset Management managing partner Gene Munster told Yahoo Finance. “It's just that they're participating in markets that [have] slower growth and they're looking for ways to try to juice that growth.”

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Apple’s China slowdown

China is Apple’s third-largest market, generating $72.6 billion of the company’s $383.3 billion in total revenue in 2023. North America, Apple’s biggest market, generated $162.6 billion, while Europe generated $94.3 billion.

All this makes reports of a slowdown in iPhone sales in China perhaps Apple’s biggest and most pressing story. A sluggish economic recovery coupled with a resurgent Huawei, which despite US sanctions has managed to put out smartphones with modern processors and features, are expected to hurt Apple’s market share in the country.

According to Counterpoint Research, the iPhone maker controlled 15% of the Chinese market in Q3 2023. That was slightly better than Huawei’s 14%, but behind Vivo’s 16% and Oppo’s 19%.

FILE PHOTO: The iPhone 15 Pro is presented during the 'Wonderlust' event at the company's headquarters in Cupertino, California, U.S. September 12, 2023. REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo
Apple's iPhone 15 Pro on display at the company's headquarters in September 2023. (Loren Elliott/REUTERS/File Photo) · REUTERS / Reuters

Analysts at Barclays, Piper Sandler, and Redburn Atlantic each pointed to the region as a potential problem for Apple with Barclays’s Tim Long saying that the firm saw “incrementally worse” iPhone 15 data out of China. He also added that he doesn’t predict any “features or upgrades that are likely to make the iPhone 16 more compelling.”

Redburn Atlantic’s James Cordwell also called out China in a Jan. 10 note, saying that he remains concerned about Apple’s competitive position in the country.